improving the social capital of our fathers · 2017. 8. 2. · u.s. prime-age male labor force...
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IMPROVING THE SOCIAL CAPITAL OF OUR FATHERS
FATHERHOOD INNOVATIONS IN WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NEW YORK
2017 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR WELFARE RESEARCH AND STATISTICS WORKSHOP
July 31, 2017
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Presenters:
Joseph D. Kenner, MBA Deputy Commissioner
Department of Social Services 914-995-3287
Reginald Lockhart Fatherhood Navigator
Department of Social Services 914-995-5574
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Special Acknowledgments “success has many fathers (and mothers)”
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• To County Executive Rob Astorino and Commissioner Kevin McGuire for their support of this pilot project and the full spectrum of dads in Westchester County.
• To the Family Services of Westchester (FSW) for their collaboration and partnership with the county on this pilot and a host of other county Fatherhood Initiative programming.
• To the Westchester County Family Court system, our DSS team and a vast array county nonprofits, community based organizations and other champions for the Westchester County family.
• To the team at the Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance for their approval of this pilot project.
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AGENDA • Why R.E.A.L. and a Fatherhood Initiative? – Setting the context
• R.E.A.L. Parenting for Stronger Families Pilot program eligibility, process and overall journey and outcomes
• Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino's Fatherhood Initiative programming
• Questions & Comments
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The R.E.A.L. Parenting Pilot Program (video) 7
Source: http://www3.westchestergov.com/fatherhood-initiative?id=0
“People don’t buy what you do; they buy why you do it…”
“…And what you do simply proves what you believe.” – Simon Sinek, Author
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• Preserve Essential Services • Protect Taxpayers • Promote Economic Growth
County Executive Astorino uses three guideposts – “Three Ps” – to manage Westchester County:
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The Department of Social Services (DSS) is the single largest county department by budget and employees
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There is a crisis…fatherlessness
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U.S. prime-age male labor force participation rate has fallen steadily over the past 60 years
The number of prime-age men not in the labor force who have not worked in the prior year increased from 73% in 1988 to 83% in 2015
Source: Council of Economic Advisers, The Long-Term Decline in Prime-Age Male Labor Force Participation, Executive Office of the President, June 2016, https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/page/files/20160620_cea_primeage_male_lfp.pdf
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The net worth of U.S. households and nonprofits more than doubled from Q1 2000 to Q4 2016 to nearly $93 trillion…
…yet challenges abound for those at the margins in our society, particularly in Westchester County…otherwise considered an affluent county
Q4 2016: 92.8 trillion
Q1 2000: 44.2 trillion
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• Average Westchester County household income of $135,000 is nearly twice that United States’ income of $76,000 and well head of new York’s income of $87,000
Nearly 70% make $50,000 or more
About 18% make over $200,000, compared to 8% for New York State and just over 5% for the United States
Meanwhile, 5% makes less than $10,000 a year, compared to 7% for the United States and almost 8% for New York State
Westchester County is an affluent county, compared to the U.S. and New York State, however pockets of poverty exist
Median Multiple vs. U.S. Mean Multiple vs. U.S.
United States 53,889 1.0 75,558 1.0 New York 59,269 1.1 86,825 1.1 Westchester County 83,958 1.6 134,714 1.8
Source: American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates, Children Characteristics. 2011-15. https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/nav/jsf/pages/community_facts.xhtml
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The employment recovery in our major urban centers lags that of the county as a whole
0.0%
1.0%
2.0%
3.0%
4.0%
5.0%
6.0%
7.0%
8.0%
9.0%
10.0%
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
New York State Westchester County Yonkers Mount Vernon New Rochelle White Plains Rye Town Greenburgh
MV 6.2%
WC 4.5%
YO 5.4%
Source: New York State , Labor Market Regions, Metropolitan, Areas, Counties, and Municipalities of at least 25,00 Population, Local Area Unemployment Statistics Program as of June 2007-2017, https://www.labor.ny.gov/stats/LSLAUS.shtm
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Nearly 40% receiving public assistance
Over a third or about 16,000 have household
income below the poverty level
Nearly 50,000 children live with a single mom
without the father present
The absence of a father presents serious challenges for the mother and child
Source: American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates, Children Characteristics. 2011-15. https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/nav/jsf/pages/community_facts.xhtml
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Substance Abuse Poor Health
Higher Dropout Rates
Increased Risk of Juvenile Delinquency
Higher Rates of Teen pregnancy
Low Self Esteem
1 Horn and Sylvester, 2002, p.15
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What are the fiscal and social implications of fatherlessness?
The impact of the “father factor” made R.E.A.L.
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Westchester County Executive Astorino's Fatherhood Initiative branding concept
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What a “fatherhood initiative” is not
• A way to absolve fathers of their responsibilities
• A short-term “flavor of the month” program for a LDSS
• A total focus on fathers, excluding the needs of women and children
• A heavy-handed way to get fathers to pay child support
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What a “fatherhood initiative” is
• Another tool to build our family engagement strategies
• Recognition of the positive role fathers play in the lives of their children
• A way to improve collaboration across “systems”
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• Equipping non-custodial parents to:
Learn effective parenting and life skills
Find sustainable employment
Achieve self-sufficiency
The goal of the R.E.A.L. pilot goes beyond just reducing arrears and increasing child support payments
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The R.E.A.L. Parenting Pilot is a true example of cross departmental & “system” collaboration
R.E.A.L. Parenting
Pilot
County Executive’s
Office Family Court
Child Support
Office of Work
Activities
One-Stop
Non-Profit
Partners
Mental Health
Faith –Based
Community Law
OTDA (New York State)
Community College
Corrections
Probation
Child Welfare
DSS
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R.E.A.L. Parenting Pilot Program Eligibility • Participation in the pilot is voluntary (limited to 25 participants)
• Eligible non-custodial parents (NCPs) include those who are:
Receiving Temporary assistance (TA), i.e. cash assistance
Currently underemployed or unemployed
Have a current support order
Have state-owed arrears over $500
Have no history of domestic violence
Felony convictions will not exclude the NCP from participation
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R.E.A.L. Parenting Pilot milestones
• Participants will have their arrears reduced on a gradual basis as they
meet the following milestones:
25% reduction for completing employment/parenting program
25% reduction once employed for 90 days
Arrears reduced to $500 for paying for 12 consecutive months
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Process Flow
Explain program requirements
Complete required documentation
Modify child support obligation
Refer to CBOs/Nonprofit Partners
Refer to One-Stop
Address employment
barriers
EMPLOYMENT
Assess job readiness
Contact with Fathers by referral or letter
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The early stages of the pilot presented a few challenges • Developing a program that fits your local agency
• Building effective system-wide coordination
• Recruiting NCPs to be participants
• Establishing trust with the NCPs and removing skepticism
• Getting NCPs job-ready
• Securing sustainable employment for the NCPs
A future program evaluation will do a
deeper dive into the pilot’s overall operation and effectiveness
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“Describe how you felt before coming into the R.E.A.L. Parenting Pilot”
Note: Ten responses each from nine non-custodial parents (fathers) in the R.E.A.L. Parenting for Stronger Families pilot on 24 January 2017.
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The path forward
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• Going forward, our emphasis will continue to focus on the pilot values:
Learn effective parenting and life skills
Find sustainable employment
Achieve self-sufficiency
R.E.A.L. Outcome Stats and Quotes 34
“ I didn’t think it was possible for me to get the help I’m getting today.” -Marquise
“Coming into this program is like a breath of fresh air. You have someone who can support you.” – Don
“You have to have a certain level of commitment. You have to have a certain level of conviction. If you take those things and carry it through, it will come to an end [state-owed arrears reduced].” - Clinton
• 20% of NCPs are working with the balance engaged in job search or job training programs
• Two-thirds of NCPs have received state-owed arrears reductions
• $100K in state-owed arrears reductions and other adjustments have been made to date
Pilot evaluation offers potential for systemic change • Prepare a summary report of pilot outcomes for the Office for Temporary
and Disability Assistance (OTDA)
• Offer recommendations to key pilot stakeholders:
DSS
Expand the pilot to a larger cohort
Change eligibility criteria
Organizational structure
Staff training
Family Court
Review of operational protocols among DSS, Family Court and Law
National/State
Institutionalize the pilot
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Our Goal
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SAVE THE DATE TUESDSAY, APRIL 3, 2018
4th ANNUAL NEW YORK FATHERING CONFERENCE WESTCHESTER COUNTY CENTER, WHITE PLAINS, NY
EMPLOYMENT WELLNESS PARENTING
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Questions & Comments
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Presenters:
Joseph D. Kenner, MBA Deputy Commissioner
Department of Social Services 914-995-3287
Reginald Lockhart Fatherhood Navigator
Department of Social Services 914-995-5574
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